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OOOH SHINY! - How to distract from eating?
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journaling has helped me a lot for some reason. Writing down my feelings rather than eat them.1
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I love this! I've been struggling lately with eating out of procrastination for doing things I find unappealing. I'm going to try a few of these tips. Thanks ladies!0
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I'm glad I've found this thread. It's hard to explain to people who don't suffer from this but I also eat even if I'm not hungry-mornings are easy but afternoons until dinner are awful. I've tried setting times for snacks, two between lunch and dinner and forbid myself anything in between -otherwise I would be snacking fruits endlessly all the afternoon. I feel less guilty as it's fruit or skimmed yoghurt but it's the same attitude as if I were eating bread and chocolate, just that I gain less weight.
I work at home most of the times which makes it worse and I can't just stand up and go for a walk. Of course if I decide to watch a 2 hour film that makes it easier for those 2 hours but I'd like not to have to organize my life around this.0 -
@jmjsfI also eat even if I'm not hungry-mornings are easy but afternoons until dinner are awful.1
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Great ideas! Now to put in practice0
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I've noticed I get hungry/moody when I stay up late, so I try to recognize it and go to sleep. *Try*0
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I get hungry in the afternoons. Lately I've been eating the previous night's leftovers as an early dinner around 4 or 5, then watching my family eat their own dinner at 6 or 7 when I am no longer hungry. Beats rampant afternoon snacking followed by what amounts to a second dinner.0
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Like some previous posters, I like to take a nice hot bath to distract me. I have a food addiction, so I also remind myself to surrender to my addiction and stick to my very strict plan. I remeind myself that I am a true addict, and that this feeling of wanting to fill myself with food will pass.
Jenn1 -
I find that I snack when I’m watching movies. For the entire month of May, I’m not gonna watch anything and just read books instead. I can’t snack while holding a book 😂0
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brenn24179 wrote: »I drink decaf coffee at night, tell myself to not eat so I wont feel guilty and disappointed in the morning when I weigh.
I drink decaf coffee for this reason, also. I also like adding sugar free flavoring to seltzer water. I keep rice cakes, apples, and celery around if I'm craving something crunchy. That way I can indulge a little bit without going overboard.1 -
- Gardening is the most effective distractor for me. Dirty hands, focusing on something else.
- Every weekend I get a Costco rotisserie chicken that I use for weekday lunch salads. Then I'll put the carcass and water and veggie scraps in the InstantPot or Crockpot and make broth, and freeze in mason jars. Having a big mug of hot broth (which I control the sodium level of) can be satisfying/comforting/warming.
- Putting my retainers in my mouth when I'm in the kitchen is a very effective snack-deflector, but I hate doing it (because its so effective).
- Drinking a bunch of water (sometimes fancified with bubbles, lemon, or infused with herbs/fruit trimmings).
- Making tea. Sometimes I forget to drink it once it's made, but the process of making tea is somehow therapeutic in itself.
- Brushing my teeth is an amazing re-set.
- Deciding, "OK, I'm going to eat a snack, but I have to put it in MFP first and put it on a plate." Then I'm more likely to choose something smart like 10 almonds + 1 cup of cherry tomatoes than my usual 6 tablespoons of almond butter eaten straight out of the jar...
- Prepping raw meat kind of disgusts me and kills my appetite. I still eat meat because I have food intolerances with eggs, dairy, and legumes, but if I didn't, I could see myself following a mostly-vegan diet.
- Grabbing a handful of dog treats and doing 5 minutes of obedience training then playing with my pup.
- Switching to a task I hate is really ineffective, because then it doubles my desire to eat a snack as distraction from the hated task.
- Chopping lots of VEGGIES is therapeutic. I do eat some pieces, but they're low-calorie, and come in slow enough that I reach satiety as I go. Any other type of food prep that involves handling higher-calorie ingredients like nuts, fruit, or cooked meat is a disaster.
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Following
Thanks for all the great tips, ladies!
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